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CFP: [Poetry] Princeton Comparative Poetics Symposium

updated: 
Sunday, February 17, 2008 - 9:32pm
Rachel Galvin

CALL FOR PAPERS
 
“CURRENCY”
Graduate Student Poetics Symposium
Department of Comparative Literature
Princeton University
Princeton, NJ
Saturday, April 26, 2008
 
 
We are pleased to invite papers that offer questions, challenges,
elaborations, and interpretations of this year’s theme. We are
particularly interested in papers that work with poetry in languages other
than English and take a comparative or interdisciplinary approach.
Topics may include but are not confined to the following:
· Poetry and current events.
· Reportage. Timeliness and news-worthiness.
· Economies and circulatory systems as tropes for value.

CFP: [Graduate] Princeton Comparative Poetics Symposium

updated: 
Sunday, February 17, 2008 - 9:31pm
Rachel Galvin

CALL FOR PAPERS
 
“CURRENCY”
Graduate Student Poetics Symposium
Department of Comparative Literature
Princeton University
Princeton, NJ
Saturday, April 26, 2008
 
 
We are pleased to invite papers that offer questions, challenges,
elaborations, and interpretations of this year’s theme. We are
particularly interested in papers that work with poetry in languages other
than English and take a comparative or interdisciplinary approach.
Topics may include but are not confined to the following:
· Poetry and current events.
· Reportage. Timeliness and news-worthiness.
· Economies and circulatory systems as tropes for value.

CFP: [Bibliography] SAMLA 2008 "Readers, Writers, and Communities in Early Modern English Literature" 4/30/2008

updated: 
Sunday, February 17, 2008 - 7:12pm
Lara Dodds

CFP SAMLA 2008 Convention : “Readers, Writers, and Communities in Early
Modern English Literature”

Textual and Bibliographical Studies Session

Papers are invited that explore the formation of communities of readers and
writers in English literature. How do writers respond to one another in
manuscript and print? How do groups of readers find community in the
textual features of books? How are the social, intellectual, or political
needs of communities met by the texts they read and write? This panel will
explore the textual means by which literature contributes to the formation
of community.

CFP: [Renaissance] SAMLA 2008 "Readers, Writers, and Communities in Early Modern English Literature" 4/30/2008

updated: 
Sunday, February 17, 2008 - 7:12pm
Lara Dodds

CFP SAMLA 2008 Convention : “Readers, Writers, and Communities in Early
Modern English Literature”

Textual and Bibliographical Studies Session

Papers are invited that explore the formation of communities of readers and
writers in English literature. How do writers respond to one another in
manuscript and print? How do groups of readers find community in the
textual features of books? How are the social, intellectual, or political
needs of communities met by the texts they read and write? This panel will
explore the textual means by which literature contributes to the formation
of community.

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